The Beginner’s Checklist of What To Do in the First Month of Your AdWords Optimization: Part 1

This month Andrew Lolk of White Shark Media joins PPC Hero as a guest blogger to discuss his personal tips for optimizing a PPC account within the first month.

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In this three-part series I will outline the routine we use for most of the AdWords accounts we manage in White Shark Media.

The first part focuses on the first 24 hours, the 2nd part focuses on the first optimization after 8 days and the 3rd post focuses on Day 14 and beyond.

With no further ado:

When you initially activate a new AdWords campaign, there are plenty of things to take into account and you don’t always know what to expect. You’re perhaps eager to get started with the optimization portion (I know I always am), but you should be careful when you optimize your AdWords account in the very first month.

The conditions in the first month are certainly different compared to those of the second.

Don’t get me wrong. I’m not saying to ignore profits or conversions in the attempt to get a higher Quality Score. However, it’s crucial for your long-term success that your Quality Score is high.

Getting your AdWords campaign off to the right start is therefore more important than immediate AdWords profits.

Know Your KPIs (Key Performance Indicators)

Before you can optimize your AdWords campaign, you need to know your KPIs. If you don’t know what specific goals you’re optimizing toward, then it’s almost impossible to come through with successful results.

If you’ve been used to working ad hoc on your AdWords account to improve it, adding specifics to your goal list will provide you with an entirely new outlook on how to achieve these objectives.

Even if you solely know the goal, it’s still a great practice.

The most common KPIs are:

Cost-per-Conversion

Conversion Rate (although not always reliable)

Clickthrough-rate

Number of Conversions

Number of Clicks

Often these KPIs are combined to give a better overall picture of your campaign’s success. However, only using the Clickthrough-rate as your sole barometer will not help you much nor your cost-per-conversion.

Step-by-Step Tips for your First Month with your AdWords Campaign

The following process was initially developed for in-house use only in White Shark Media. It was developed for Account Executives to better be able to review accounts in their first month no matter if they had been on the job for a year or 2 months.

It’s crucial for an AdWords agency to have consistency in service quality and by introducing guidelines like these we’ve been able to experience amazing success. The process was later further refined and fully optimized with the help of our many Account Executives who worked with it on a daily basis.

Take Caution Before Activating Your Campaign

I recommend never activating your campaign on Fridays… Why, you ask?

Let’s be honest. It’s not sure that you will be able to get up on a Saturday or Sunday morning to optimize the campaign. Letting new AdWords campaigns run for longer than 24 hours without reacting can be a waste of money.

Search volume and conversions are notoriously low on weekends for most commercial searches. You will not get a clear view of how your campaign is performing until Monday anyway. Save yourself the heartache and stress and start your campaigns Monday through Thursday!

The 24-Hour Review

It’s crucial to review your account after 24 hours of being activated. There will, in most cases, be ads and keywords that are severely underperforming.

Pausing these in the early stages of your campaign’s run can help you succeed.

Bid Review on an Exceeded Budget

Review the bidding at the end of the first day. What you will be looking for is whether or not your budget had been met on the day in question.

The easiest way to check this is to go to your AdWords account and view the date range of Yesterday and afterwards, Today. If any of these show an expense equal to or in excess of your AdWords budget, then it’s time to lower your bids.

You should lower your bidding for either:

a) All keywords (equally throughout)

b) Your top-spenders

Often you will see some of your keywords costing you a lot more money than the rest. If this is the case, then my advice to you is to reduce the CPC bids on these, but leave the rest as they are, as well.

Bid Review for Too Few Clicks

If your budget isn’t even close to being met either Yesterday or Today, then it’s time to review your keyword list and bidding.

Generally, ads/keywords in positions below 7 will receive very few clicks. If you find the majority of your keywords in this position, consider increasing your bidding to around 20-40%.

Continue with the 24-hour Reviews Until You Hit the Desired Level of Performance

Whether your campaign isn’t generating enough clicks to meet the budget or if your budget is exceeded early in the day, you need to keep performing a sub-sequential 24-hour bid review until you’ve reached the desired point.

My golden rule is that I always plan for 10% of my total budget being left over each day. This gives me the necessary wiggle room for days with higher search volume. At the same time, it ensures that we aren’t missing any clicks due to hitting our budget ceiling too early in the day.

Note: If you have an endless budget or have great experience with AdWords, then try to give your campaigns plenty of top-room budget and only optimize for maximum profits.

In my experience, working without budget constraints has always produced a greater profit.

Are All Keywords and Ads Active?

A quick review of whether or not your ads and keywords are active is mandatory.

Check for the following:

Disapproved ads

Disapproved keywords (although this is rare)

Keywords below first-page bid amounts

Conflicting negative keywords

Be Ready for Next Week When I Explain How to Best Optimize After 8 Days of Activating Your AdWords Campaign

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Deciding not to have a dedicated feed resource will result in lost revenue from a channel that has consistently proven to garner high performance

158 SHARES

mayurtechnosoft

Hi Andrew

This is awesome post for Beginners.I gain knowledge from this post.

http://twitter.com/AndrewLolk Andrew Lolk

I’m glad you liked it.

If anyone has any questions or comments, I’m available in the following days.

Kind regards, Andrew Lolk

Jerry

Excellent point for beginner “If Adwords account shows an expense equal to or in excess of your adwords budget, then it’s time to lower your bids”. I have come across my daily budget finishes during the day rather then lasting til midnight even thou selected standard ( Delivery method) and Optimize for clicks (Ad rotation). Isn’t it advisable to lower bids in this case also.

http://twitter.com/AndrewLolk Andrew Lolk

Hi Jerry,

Unless you’re in a niche, where you don’t gain anything by being in the lower ad positions, then you should rarely use the standard delivery method.

If you’re consistently reaching your budget limit then you should lower your bids. Start with the keywords that show the lowest conversions first.

Kind regards, Andrew

AlexanderHoll

Very good article for adwords starters. Thanks for the do not start adwords onfriday recommendation, which i did not think of. Alexander

http://twitter.com/AndrewLolk Andrew Lolk

I’m glad you liked it, Alexander..

akshat singh

hi Andrew, thanks giving me this information this would really help, however i am looking to start the PPC by my own, please guide me about some information how to choose keywords and what are the most critical thing i should keep in mind, please mail me as akshat@uinvinc.com

Chad Stewart

Don’t you feel that it’s important to monitor the relationship between your CPC, average position and quality score? I’ve found tremendous benefit from running weekly reports for my clients where I tweak maximum bids based on the average positioning and fluctuating quality scores.

I’ve often found that the old myth about only the first two-three positions receiving all of the clicks is not true. As long as your QS is good, you can lower bids and even sacrifice position without seeing any drop-off in the KPIs you discuss.

Maybe what I’m talking about is a technique beginners should hold off on, but I have seen this work in new accounts when they are launched. Either way, thanks for posting!